Padel vs Tennis: Complete Comparison
Same racket-sport family — very different games. Whether you're a tennis player curious about padel or choosing your first sport, this guide covers court rules, costs, fitness, and how to switch between both.
20×10 m
Padel court
vs 23.8×10.97 m tennis
Doubles
Padel format
Tennis: singles or doubles
2–3
Sessions to adapt
If you already play tennis
Quick verdict
Padel to start · tennis for solo fitness
Choose padel if you want fast progress, social doubles, and lower impact. Choose tennis if you want singles, maximum cardio, or already have local court access. Many players enjoy both — skills transfer more than you'd expect.
At a glance
- Easier to learn — rally in your first session
- Always doubles — highly social
- Less running — smaller court, longer rallies
- Walls add a unique tactical dimension
- Fastest-growing racket sport worldwide
- Established global sport — Olympic since 1896
- Singles or doubles — play alone or in pairs
- Higher calorie burn — more court to cover
- Surface variety — clay, grass, hard court
- Massive court infrastructure worldwide
Six critical differences
Court size
Padel
20 m × 10 m (enclosed)
Tennis
23.77 m × 10.97 m (doubles)
Padel means less running and more tactical positioning at the net.
Walls
Padel
Glass + mesh — ball stays in play
Tennis
Open court — ball out is a fault
Wall rebounds are the biggest mindset shift for tennis players.
Serve
Padel
Underhand, below waist height
Tennis
Overhead — full technical motion
Padel serves are easier to learn and less physically demanding.
Racket
Padel
Solid perforated face, no strings
Tennis
Stringed frame with adjustable tension
Padel offers more inherent control; tennis allows more power variation.
Format
Padel
Doubles only (2v2)
Tennis
Singles or doubles
Padel is built around teamwork — positioning with your partner is essential.
Learning curve
Padel
Fun games within 1–2 sessions
Tennis
Steeper start — serve and groundstrokes take time
Padel rewards beginners faster; both sports take years to master.
What they share
Scoring
Both commonly use 15–30–40–game scoring and best-of-three sets. Padel often adds a golden point at deuce.
Ball type
Similar pressurized balls — padel balls have slightly lower pressure and less bounce.
Net play
Volleys, drop shots, and positioning at the net are crucial in both sports.
Footwork
Split-step, lateral movement, and quick reactions transfer directly between sports.
Match format
Competitive matches are typically best of three sets at club and pro level.
Mental game
Shot selection, patterns, and composure under pressure matter equally.
Tennis → padel transition
Wall play
MediumTreat wall rebounds like billiards — read the angle off glass before you swing.
Power management
EasyCut swing speed by 30–40%. Padel rewards placement over raw pace.
Underhand serve
EasyFocus on depth and targeting the receiver's backhand — not pace.
Net positioning
MediumMove up as a pair. Baseline defence is less effective than in tennis doubles.
Shot selection
HardUse lobs and wall shots instead of flat passing shots down the line.
Your tennis advantages
- Volleys transfer directly
- Footwork and split-step timing carry over
- Reading spin and trajectory is the same skill
- Competitive mindset applies immediately
- Hand-eye coordination gives you a head start
Padel → tennis transition
Power generation
HardDevelop a full swing — longer backswing and follow-through on groundstrokes.
Overhead serve
HardWork with a coach on serve mechanics — the most technical shot in tennis.
Court coverage
MediumBuild endurance for a larger court — expect significantly more running.
Singles strategy
MediumLearn to construct points alone — no partner to cover gaps.
String tension
EasyExperiment between 50–60 lbs to find your preferred feel and control.
Your padel advantages
- Net game and touch are already strong
- Finesse shots and drop volleys transfer well
- Doubles positioning sense carries over
- Ball control from padel walls improves tennis touch
- Mental toughness from competitive padel helps
Equipment & costs
| Item | Padel | Tennis | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Racket | €60–300 | €50–350 | Padel rackets have no strings to replace |
| Balls | €3–6 / can | €3–7 / can | Both need regular replacement |
| Shoes | €60–150 | €60–200 | Clay/omni tennis shoes often work for padel |
| Court rental | €15–40 / hr | €10–50 / hr | Varies by city, indoor vs outdoor, peak times |
Padel startup
€150–500
Racket, shoes, balls, 3–4 court sessions
Tennis startup
€140–600
Racket, shoes, balls, 3–4 court sessions
Which should you choose?
Choose padel if
Quick results
Start rallying in your first session
Social play
Always doubles, mixed-skill friendly
Lower impact
Easier on joints, less sprinting
Tactical game
Walls create chess-like angles
Starting later
Popular with players 30+ new to racket sports
Choose tennis if
Solo option
Singles is widely available
Maximum fitness
Higher-intensity cardio workout
Global access
Courts in virtually every country
Competitive pathway
Established tournament structure
Power & pace
Big serves and groundstroke winners
Best answer
Play both. Padel indoors in winter, tennis in summer — or padel for social sessions and tennis for solo fitness. Skills cross-pollinate and variety prevents burnout.
Common questions
Should I play both padel and tennis?
Many players do — padel in winter on indoor courts, tennis in summer. Padel improves net touch for tennis doubles; tennis builds power and coverage for padel attack. Skills cross-pollinate well.
Which sport is growing faster?
Padel is the fastest-growing racket sport globally, with court construction outpacing tennis in Spain, Scandinavia, and the Middle East. Tennis remains far larger in total participation.
What racket should a tennis player buy for padel?
Start with a round, control-oriented frame like the Head Radical Team — see our beginner's guide for full recommendations and live catalog prices.
New to padel?
Rules, gear, court types, and wall play — everything you need after choosing padel over tennis.
Find your first padel racket
Tennis players switching to padel should start with a round, control-friendly frame — browse our catalog with live prices.
